Modern and scalable routing for React applications
Modern and scalable routing for React applications
Modern and scalable routing for React applications
Modern and scalable routing for React applications
Modern and scalable routing for React applications
Modern and scalable routing for React applications
Modern and scalable routing for React applications
Next-generation ES module bundler
Model Context Protocol implementation for TypeScript
An exchange for operation retry support in urql
Starts server, waits for URL, then runs test command; when the tests end, shuts down server
Register named callbacks and call them with arguments.
Public logs API for OpenTelemetry
A logger for just about everything.
The most popular front-end framework for developing responsive, mobile first projects on the web.
A comprehensive library for mime-type mapping
Command-line interface for all things Cloudflare Workers
CSS color - Resolve and convert CSS colors.
A calculator for humanity’s peculiar conventions of time.
Match balanced character pairs, like "{" and "}"
Transform OpenTelemetry SDK data into OTLP
Minimal GraphQL client supporting Node and browsers for scripts or simple apps.
Fully featured SOCKS proxy client supporting SOCKSv4, SOCKSv4a, and SOCKSv5. Includes Bind and Associate functionality.
Microsofts' EdgeDriver for Node.js
Self-contained, easy-setup, fast-start in-memory Chef server for testing and solo setup purposes
Self-contained, easy-setup, fast-start in-memory Chef Community Site for testing.
Self-contained, easy-setup, fast-start in-memory Chef Community Site for testing.
Daemons provides an easy way to wrap existing ruby scripts (for example a self-written server) to be run as a daemon and to be controlled by simple start/stop/restart commands. You can also call blocks as daemons and control them from the parent or just daemonize the current process. Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features like exception backtracing and logging (in case your ruby script crashes) and monitoring and automatic restarting of your processes if they crash.
Daemons provides an easy way to wrap existing ruby scripts (for example a self-written server) to be run as a daemon and to be controlled by simple start/stop/restart commands. You can also call blocks as daemons and control them from the parent or just daemonize the current process. Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features like exception backtracing and logging (in case your ruby script crashes) and monitoring and automatic restarting of your processes if they crash.
Daemons provides an easy way to wrap existing ruby scripts (for example a self-written server) to be run as a daemon and to be controlled by simple start/stop/restart commands. You can also call blocks as daemons and control them from the parent or just daemonize the current process. Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features like exception backtracing and logging (in case your ruby script crashes) and monitoring and automatic restarting of your processes if they crash.
Daemons provides an easy way to wrap existing ruby scripts (for example a self-written server) to be run as a daemon and to be controlled by simple start/stop/restart commands. You can also call blocks as daemons and control them from the parent or just daemonize the current process. Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features like exception backtracing and logging (in case your ruby script crashes) and monitoring and automatic restarting of your processes if they crash.
Daemons provides an easy way to wrap existing ruby scripts (for example a self-written server) to be run as a daemon and to be controlled by simple start/stop/restart commands. You can also call blocks as daemons and control them from the parent or just daemonize the current process. Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features like exception backtracing and logging (in case your ruby script crashes) and monitoring and automatic restarting of your processes if they crash.
This is Daemons 1.0.10 with the addition of Chris Kline's fix from http://blog.rapleaf.com/dev/?p=19 Daemons provides an easy way to wrap existing ruby scripts (for example a self-written server) to be run as a daemon and to be controlled by simple start/stop/restart commands. If you want, you can also use daemons to run blocks of ruby code in a daemon process and to control these processes from the main application. Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features like exception backtracing and logging (in case your ruby script crashes) and monitoring and automatic restarting of your processes if they crash. Daemons includes the daemonize.rb script written by Travis Whitton to do the daemonization process.
This is Daemons 1.0.10 with the addition of Chris Kline's fix from http://blog.rapleaf.com/dev/?p=19 Daemons provides an easy way to wrap existing ruby scripts (for example a self-written server) to be run as a daemon and to be controlled by simple start/stop/restart commands. If you want, you can also use daemons to run blocks of ruby code in a daemon process and to control these processes from the main application. Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features like exception backtracing and logging (in case your ruby script crashes) and monitoring and automatic restarting of your processes if they crash. Daemons includes the daemonize.rb script written by Travis Whitton to do the daemonization process.
This is Daemons 1.0.10 with the addition of Chris Kline's fix from http://blog.rapleaf.com/dev/?p=19 Includes ability to change the process uid/gid. Also logdir can be specified seperate from piddir. Daemons provides an easy way to wrap existing ruby scripts (for example a self-written server) to be run as a daemon and to be controlled by simple start/stop/restart commands. If you want, you can also use daemons to run blocks of ruby code in a daemon process and to control these processes from the main application. Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features like exception backtracing and logging (in case your ruby script crashes) and monitoring and automatic restarting of your processes if they crash. Daemons includes the daemonize.rb script written by Travis Whitton to do the daemonization process.
ERBook 9.2.1 Write books, manuals, and documents in eRuby http://snk.tuxfamily.org/lib/erbook/ ERBook is an extensible document processor that emits [1]any document you can imagine from [2]eRuby templates, which allow scripting and dynamic content generation. Version 9.2.1 (2009-11-18) This release fixes some bugs in, and improves the readability and load time of, generated XHTML documents. Bug fixes * Prevent search button from starting search when search box untouched. * Prevent browser from fetching base-64 embedded URI sources by qualifying their digests with the "cid" URI schema, which is used to identify the parts of a multi-part e-mail message. This cuts down on the amount of "404 - File Not Found" errors on the web server which hosts your generated XHTML documents because web browsers will not confuse these embedded "cid" digests as being relative HTTP files. Housekeeping * Increase vertical spacing between [3]References for better readability. * Embed W3C validator badges as base-64 data URIs to reduce page load time. * Split the document processing code in ERBook::Document into smaller self-documenting methods. References 1. http://snk.tuxfamily.org/lib/erbook/#HelloWorld 2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ERuby 3. http://snk.tuxfamily.org/lib/erbook/#_references